Suggestions of late romanticism, elements from rock and jazz, ethnic music from Indian flutes to West Coast, choirs of angels, countless instruments he plays himself, like sitar, saranghi, harp, keyboards, guitars, various flutes and percussion, along with natural sounds... All this is interwoven and mixed as if it were completely natural. The Mantic music of the spiritual teacher Awankana, who lives near Buenos Aires, is unique. It is dreamlike not in the sense of the cliché but in the sense of C. G. Jung's theory of archetypes.
Suggestions of late romanticism, elements from rock and jazz, ethnic music from Indian flutes to West Coast, choirs of angels, countless instruments he plays himself, like sitar, saranghi, harp, keyboards, guitars, various flutes and percussion, along with natural sounds... All this is interwoven and mixed as if it were completely natural. The Mantic music of the spiritual teacher Awankana, who lives near Buenos Aires, is unique. It is dreamlike not in the sense of the cliché but in the sense of C. G. Jung's theory of archetypes.